arly in The Great Society, the sequel to the Tony-winning All The Way, President Lyndon B Johnson recalls the women of his youth in the Texas Hill Country, mothers and aunts with bent backs and hands crabbed by a “dog’s life”. When a younger Johnson finally made it to Washington, he did whatever it took to bring them electricity – kissed up, begged, told “a lie or two”. The ends justified the means, he was sure.
he was a good domestic policy president
He's also in The Autopsy of Jane Doe.
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